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- Title
Hypoxia–ischemia preferentially triggers glutamate depletion from oligodendroglia and axons in perinatal cerebral white matter.
- Authors
Back, Stephen A.; Craig, Andrew; Kayton, Robert J.; Ning Ling Luo; Meshul, Charles K.; Allcock, Natalie; Fern, Robert
- Abstract
Ischemia is implicated in periventricular white matter injury (PWMI), a lesion associated with cerebral palsy. PWMI features selective damage to early cells of the oligodendrocyte lineage, a phenomenon associated with glutamate receptor activation. We have investigated the distribution of glutamate in rat periventricular white matter at post-natal day 7. Immuno-electron microcopy was used to identify O4(+) oligodendroglia in control rats, and a similar approach was employed to stain glutamate in these cells before and after 90 mins of hypoxia–ischemia. This relatively brief period of hypoxia–ischemia produced mild cell injury, corresponding to the early stages of PWMI. Glutamate-like reactivity was higher in oligodendrocytes than in other cell types (2.13±0.25 counts/μm2), and declined significantly during hypoxia–ischemia (0.93±0.15 counts/μm2: P<0.001). Astrocytes had lower glutamate levels (0.7±0.07 counts/μm2), and showed a relatively small decline during hypoxia–ischemia. Axonal regions contained high levels of glutamate (1.84±0.20 counts/μm2), much of which was lost during hypoxia–ischemia (0.72±0.20 counts/μm2: P>0.001). These findings suggest that oligodendroglia and axons are the major source of extracellular glutamate in developing white matter during hypoxia–ischemia, and that astrocytes fail to accumulate the glutamate lost from these sources. We also examined glutamate levels in the choroid plexus. Control glutamate levels were high in both choroid epithelial (1.90±0.20 counts/μm2), and ependymal cells (2.20±0.28 counts/μm2), and hypoxia–ischemia produced a large fall in ependymal glutamate (0.97±0.08 counts/μm2: P>0.001). The ependymal cells were damaged by the insult and represent a further potential source of glutamate during ischemia.Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism (2007) 27, 334–347. doi:10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600344; published online 7 June 2006
- Subjects
ISCHEMIA; BLOOD circulation disorders; CEREBRAL anoxia; HYPOXEMIA; BLOOD circulation; BIOCHEMISTRY; BLOOD flow
- Publication
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2007, Vol 27, Issue 2, p334
- ISSN
0271-678X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600344